Since it says that is not an option at the moment, is there any other way to free up Gmail memory quickly?
–
LazerSep 26 '10 at 20:43

Try www.findbigmail.com - it groups mails into groups by size and labels them accordingly, as well as the top 20. Free for @gmail.com and paid for Google Apps domains (after a free trial).
–
mm2001Mar 17 '12 at 0:28

6 Answers
6

Simplest way is to delete messages with big, but unnecessary, attachments.

The search operator has:attachment will be helpful there. Using the filename: operator will even be more helpful, as some files of dubious worth will tend to be video or sound files and can get large, e.g.filename:wmv. Dumping those messages should go a long way to clearing up some space.

Update: There is a recently-launched service called Find Big Mail which will (by default) create three IMAP labels to help you find messages with filesizes of 500KB, 2MB, and more than 2MB (although there is some customization available). It uses OAuth to protect your password, but you do need to trust that there's not something nefarious it's doing while it scans your mail.

Update 2: Google has added some new search operators for message size. For example, searching for size:1000000 will find messages larger than 1 MB (1 million bytes) in size. larger: and smaller: are similar, but they allow for abbreviations. For example: larger:10M finds messages larger than 10 MB.

The best workaround this would be to download/delete your emails. Downloading them for backup and storage sounds to be the best option. A great way to do this is by using a desktop app, most notably the best would be Mail on Mac OS X and Outlook or Thunderbird on Windows.

You should go ahead and do this by date (in my opinion), you won't be needing older emails more over newer ones on gmail.

Go ahead and load up the client of your choice, and you can export emails using export/archive functionalities.

I would suggest using a different name on the file just to make it relevant and backed up. It might take awhile to download all your messages in apps like Thunderbird where most email accounts (esp Gmail) are IMAP.

After doing this, you will probably have all or most of your space back. Also, if you think this is too laborious, you should just go ahead and buy more storage from Google, 5 bucks a year for 20gigs.

a) it only measures the size of attachments,
b) it doesn't use https, which doesn't fill me with confidence, and
c) I wouldn't be comfortable with (or recommend) typing my gmail username and password into a third-party site anyway.

What I'd do is open a free web mail account that gives unlimited storage (like Yahoo or Hotmail). Then turn on POP3 on the Gmail account, and use POP3 to download the emails to the Yahoo/Hotmail account. Check periodically to see how many emails have been downloaded. Generally, the mails are downloaded in chronological order. So check up to which date the mails have been fetched by the secondary account.

Then go to Gmail and delete those that have been "backed up" to the secondary account. You'd be free of GBs of storage in days and you haven't lost any of your emails.

This is how I got in to using Hotmail. After the recent Hotmail upgrade, I just ditched Gmail and started just using Hotmail. :) Now I have my Gmail account forward emails to the hotmail account.